Edgemon v. State

630 S.W.2d 26, 275 Ark. 313, 1982 Ark. LEXIS 1306
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 15, 1982
DocketCR 81-110
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 630 S.W.2d 26 (Edgemon v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edgemon v. State, 630 S.W.2d 26, 275 Ark. 313, 1982 Ark. LEXIS 1306 (Ark. 1982).

Opinion

Darrell Hickman, Justice.

Billy Joe Edgemon was convicted of first degree murder of Jimmy McCormick and sentenced to life imprisonment and a $10,000.00 fine.

His chief argument is that the court erroneously admitted evidence that Edgemon was involved in a stolen car ring. The State argued that the evidence was necessary to show that Edgemon had a motive to kill McCormick. We find that the trial court was correct in admitting the evidence because the State clearly demonstrated that evidence to be an inseparable part of the case, and probative of Edgemon’s motive to kill McCormick.

The State’s case was circumstantial, there being no eyewitness to the killing and no admission by Edgemon. Edgemon lived alone outside Altus in Franklin County on a farm where he raised hogs. During the summer and fall of 1979 Jimmy McCormick stayed with Edgemon and helped him on the farm. At that time Edgemon was in the process of divorcing his second wife and had no relatives living with him on a regular basis.

On the evening of the 14th of January, 1980, Edgemon and McCormick drove to nearby Coal Hill in a yellow 1979 International Scout to see two women: Suzie Johnson, who was McCormick’s girl friend, and a woman named Rosetta Wilson. All four returned to Edgemon’s place, stayed a few hours, and then McCormick and the two women left. McCormick dropped the women off at home. Several hours later he returned to Suzie Johnson’s house and said he had wrecked the Scout. He spent the night. The focus of the case is on what happened the next day, the 15th of January.

Suzie Johnson testified that Edgemon came by her house three times. The first time she did not answer the door. When Edgemon returned later, she gave him the keys to the Scout and said McCormick had wrecked it. McCormick did not come to the door. Edgemon left again and returned about six or seven p.m. Johnson said McCormick told Edgemon that he had hidden the tags to the Scout in the woods. Edgemon and McCormick left together and McCormick was not seen alive again by any witness.

Robert Dale Pyron, an acquaintance of Edgemon, testified he was with Edgemon on the 15th. Pyron said he had seen a Scout like Edgemon’s being towed by a wrecker that morning. He found Edgemon and they went to the wrecker yard. They saw that the Scout was Edgemon’s, but they did not retrieve it. Pyron said Edgemon expressed concern about whether his keys were in the Scout and whether the tags were still on it. They went to talk to Don Holloway, who said they had better get the keys and the tags. Edgemon and Pyron went to Suzie Johnson’s where Edgemon got the keys. While en route to Edgemon’s place Edgemon told Pyron to throw the key to the Scout out the window, which he did. According to Pyron Edgemon made several statements about McCormick, one of which was that he thought Suzie Johnson was hiding McCormick. He also said that “. . . it would be one less burden on the world if Jimmy weren’t around.” At another time he said, “ ... if Jimmy came back over to his house he’d kill him.” Pyron said that Edgemon told him to deny any knowledge if he was questioned by the police about the Scout.

McCormick’s body was found on the 23rd of January, in a culvert on a county road. He had been killed with a shotgun blast and had been dead seven or eight days. Across the road the officers found a piece of carpet and a bloody mattress which contained pellets from a shotgun. The mattress was covered with a design of bicentennial emblems. A calendar wristwatch on McCormick was stopped between the 15th and 16th of January.

The police questioned Edgemon that day about the killing. He said McCormick had left his home on the 15th and that he had not seen him since. He denied any other knowledge and was released. The following day Edgemon drove a 1979 Cougar XR-7, which had been in his possession, into a mining pit that was filled with water.

On the 25th of January, the police searched Edgemon’s home. They found what appeared to be blood stains on a piece of carpet, coffee table, and another piece of furniture. These items were all located in front of the fireplace. Two shotguns were seized, one of which was a twelve gauge Marlin loaded with Magnum western shells, number four shot. A North Carolina license plate was also seized.

The State recovered the Cougar and proved that it and the Scout were stolen. The license on the Scout was registered to Dorothy Reynolds, Edgemon’s second wife, but the tag belonged on a 1980 Lincoln Continental. The North Carolina tags found at Edgemon’s house belonged on the Cougar. A deputy sheriff testified that Edgemon had told him the Scout was his. There was testimony that the Cougar had been seen regularly parked at Edgemon’s.

Two witnesses testified that the mattress found near McCormick’s body was just like a mattress or mattresses that had been at Edgemon’s. One witness, Charles Montgomery, who had stayed at Edgemon’s for a month with McCormick, said he and McCormick had each slept on such a mattress in front of the fireplace.

Edgemon told the police that the blood on the carpet piece and furniture was from a cut on his foot. An expert testified, however, that the blood on those articles was type A positive. Edgemon had type B positive blood. Another expert testified that the shot and wadding taken from McCormick’s body was consistent with that contained in the shotgun shells found in one of the shotguns seized at Edgemon’s.

The testimony objected to on appeal which implicated Edgemon in several car thefts came from Charles Montgomery and a North Carolina police officer. Montgomery was serving a prison sentence for theft when he testified. He testified that he stayed at Edgemon’s about a month in the summer of 1979. He said that he, McCormick, Edgemon and Edgemon’s son Mark, and Don Holloway planned to set up a car theft ring. He, McCormick, and Mark, working out of Edgemon’s farm, would steal the vehicles and Don Holloway would provide the titles.

He said he first met Edgemon when he sold him a stolen 1979 Scout for $400.00; it was worth $8,900.00. Next he sold him a 1979 Chevrolet Caprice stolen in Louisiana for $400.00; it was worth $8,000.00. He stole a 1979 LTD station wagon worth $7,500.00, and said he gave it to Edgemon. Montgomery said he stole a 1979 Chevrolet pick-up truck in Kansas and used a title Edgemon had for a 1979 Chevrolet truck; he took the truck to North Carolina where he unwittingly sold it to a police “sting” operation. While there, he stole the 1979 Cougar XR-7 and drove it back to Arkansas. He said he gave the Cougar to Mark Edgemon to repay a debt of $135.00. He testified that Edgemon knew all these vehicles were stolen and it was their intention to set up a ring.

The North Carolina policeman testified that he bought the 1979 truck from Montgomery in an undercover “sting” operation and the title was in Mark Edgemon’s name.

Edgemon denied that he killed McCormick or actually knew that any of the vehicles were stolen. He admitted driving the Cougar into the mining pit but he said he did so because his son had driven the car and he did not want him implicated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
630 S.W.2d 26, 275 Ark. 313, 1982 Ark. LEXIS 1306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgemon-v-state-ark-1982.